Vegemite

Vegemite is a yeast spread, an Australian competitor to British-made Marmite.

It is a very shiny, very dark, reddish, deep-brown spreadable paste. It is so thick that if you were to tip a jar up, it might take hours or days for it to run out of the jar.

It is salty-tasting, but milder than Marmite. It smells vaguely akin to soy sauce. Detractors say it smells like seaweed gone rancid.

It is present in 90% of the homes in Australia.

Vegemite is made from an extract from yeast leftover after beer making.

The yeast is sieved, then washed to remove bitterness, then put in plain water heated to 98.6 F (37 C.) As the yeast cells die (no food for them has been added to the water), they release minerals and vitamins into the water. Through centrifugal force, the yeast cells are removed, leaving behind the nutrient-rich water, which is then concentrated under vacuum, and seasoned with spices and flavoured with vegetable extracts from vegetables such as celery and onion.

Nutrition

The salt content of original recipe was 10%; this has been reduced to 8%.

Nutrition Facts

Per 1 teaspoon (5 ml)

Amount

Calories

37

Fat

0 g

Sodium

153 mg

Carbohydrate

1 g

Protein

1.2 g

History Notes

Vegemite was invented in 1922 by a chemist, a Dr. Cyril Percy Callister (1893 - 1949.)

He was working for the Fred Walker Cheese Company in Melbourne, Australia, which produced cheeses and meats, owned by Fred Walker (1884-1935.)

Marmite had already on the Australian market since 1910, marketed by the "Sanitarium Health Food Company."

Callister had just joined the company. Walker gave a sample of Marmite to Callister, and asked him to imitate it, which he did. The yeast used was supplied by Carlton & United Breweries in Abbotsford, Melbourne (established 1907, since 1983 owned by Elders Brewing Group, later renamed to Fosters.)

He held a competition for the name, inviting suggestions to be submitted. His daughter (Sheilah) selected from the submissions the name "Vegemite", and the person who suggested it (name unknown) was awarded 50 Australian pounds. Names she rejected included "Black Fecula" and "Slagamite."

He launched Vegemite in 1923. It was first sold in 2 oz (56g) amber-coloured glass jars. The label said it was "Pure Vegetable Extract." He face heavy competition at first from Marmite, the established yeast spread product. Later, when he'd broken into the market, he increased the size offering range to 2, 4, 6, and 8 oz jars, and in tins, 1 pound and 6 pounds.

1925 - Fred Walker arranges to have the making of Kraft processed cheese in Australia farmed out to him, and he created a subsidiary to his "Fred Walker and Co. Company" called the "Kraft Walker Cheese Company";

1926 - Vegemite was sold in opaque porcelain jars with metal lids;

1928 - Walker attempted to rename the product to "Parwill", hoping that would boost sales. The name was a slag at Marmite ("if Marmite, then Parwill" -- if Ma might, then Pa will), but it was too obscure a reference and didn't help at all. By 1935, the name was back to Vegemite;

1933 - Walker introduced new jars that could be used afterwards for other things, anything from salt and pepper shakers to an egg cup;

1935 - Walker had a breakthrough idea: when a consumer purchased any other product made by his company, they got a free jar of Vegemite. This got people to try it. The campaign lasted for 2 years. You got a coupon for a free jar of Vegemite;

1935 - Fred Walker dies. The rights to Vegemite were sold to Kraft. At some point prior to this, Walker had changed the description to "Pure Yeast Extract." When Kraft acquired the product, they changed the description again to "Concentrated Yeast Extract";

1937 - The company held a contest for people to write poems about Vegemite, giving away a Pontiac car as a prize;

1939 - Before the war, the company got the British Medical Association to endorse the product as a good source of Vitamin B;

1942 - Consumer sales of Vegemite were rationed, as much of the Vegemite made was going into rations for Australian troops. For the troops, it was packaged in tins. Sometime around World War II, Vegemite finally overtook Marmite in sales in Australia.

1940s - Vegemite jars could be used as drinking glasses, and featured Disney characters on the labels;